I am looking at offering 360 Videos as an additional service to our clients but i have no clue which of the 360 heroes products to buy. Please advise what gear I need in order to shoot 360 x 180 Videos of Weddings as well indoor accommodation advertising. My second question is I saw a 360 video the other day where the stand and the person moving the camera was invisible within the 360 video. How does this work and does this require editing and if so in what software?

I look forward to some help!

P.S. I am not very impressed by 360 Heroes support as I have asked the above question twice with no response.

Kolor is selling the Freedom360 mount at http://www.kolor.com/buy/pack-freedom-rig-360.html, including a wide range of suitable accessories. The optional 5x adapter gives you two different configurations in one mount, plus the original Freedom360 geometry lets you orient the rig in any direction you need for framing a shot perfectly, while not drawing unnecessary attention during the shoot.

netline wrote:My second question is I saw a 360 video the other day where the stand and the person moving the camera was invisible within the 360 video. How does this work and does this require editing and if so in what software?

It would help posting a link to the video you were referring to. In general, the mounting pole "vanishes" in the stitching process, at least with the Freedom360 mount (which is why I invented that geometry). Hiding the person holding the pole can be achieved in three ways:1. using a long pole (i.e. the 6m NodalNinja CF pole, extended to 3-5m) with counter-weights (or similar devices) at the end. If you are in a crowd, or a group of people, bringing the F360 towards the center of the action, you become a background object, barely recognizable as the person actually holding the camera. you could even hide behind another person.2. for static shots, hiding a mounting plate for a pole under a piece of carpet is easy. or use a clamp/hook to hang the pole from the ceiling.3. this is probably difficult or advanced: repeat the take twice: switching sides between the takes: you would need to have a robot like precision of your movement, but you could merge the 2 takes (in theory)

Hey Joergen or anyone else,I am interested in taking this to hotels in the area. Here is a link to a video I like.http://www.shangri-la.com/toronto/shang ... deo-tour/#I don't mind the missing area on the Bottom.Would they have just 6 cameras hooked up, leaving the bottom camera off? Is that what is being done here? And can this be stitched like this with the Autopano Video software?And lastly, would you have any idea how this was shot? Tripod on wheels?

emmm... I have checked out the Ladybug for a long time.... It was in the back of my mind that this gear was used when I saw this video tour... Very very interesting... The Ladybug 3 is used by Google street view....

Do you think the rig was mounted on a motorised trolly of some kind.... ??

Hello,I have a small company making 360photos and interactive videos. Since the beginning of 360video I am very interested in the technique and capabilities. Finding a streamlined and efficient workflow is not so simple. If I have found that I will definitely offer this product to my clients. Until then a lot of testing.

Henk!Thank you very much for the info. I really appreciate it.€10,000? Well out of my range too You are obviously the guy to ask so, do you think that the gopros could do anything "similar" to this?Maybe with a pole for the gopros and a glidecam? http://www.glidecam.com/products.php

Glidecam is a real great device and an alternative to the "real" (and VERY expensive) Steadycam. There´s even a spring-loaded arm and vest for it.

But for the GoPro-rig it´s not recommendable: the grip is off-center - so you always see your arm with the grip. When your moving isn´t smooth enough you can use the "warp-stabilizer" in AfterEffects (you anyway need a video-postpro application) - with which you can achive moves from your sequnces like made with a track-dolly.Of course you need to attempt moving soft and smooth nevertheless.

The way Joergen described definitely is the preferable way to hold the rig.

Yes I think you can make such a similar production with GoPro cameras but it will not be easy. Testing and testing is the answer. Both with software and hardware! (I’am also searching for the best and affordable solution for this kind of productions)

Working with a GlideCam is (according to me) not an option. I have a GlideCam with arm and vest myself and tested it with GoPro cameras. Disadvantage is that the movements, as you walk, moves a little bit up and down. With a normal camera you can compensate that with software because you only have one direction you are looking at. That doesn't work with multiple cameras. You always have a kind of wavy movement. If your image on front goes down, your image behind goes up. The best is, as Joergen and Klaus also indicate, to use as fixed steady rig.

Here is some info on all the equipment you need to shoot 360° video with GoPro's. The price estimates below are specific to the 360Heros rig's, since that is what I use.

But you would probably just need the 6 camera rig, since huge end-resolution probably isn't a deciding factor and it'll keep costs down. So you could use the Freedom360 or the 360Heros H3pro6. Or for 280° of capture then use 360Heros H3pro6N. You can adjust the price estimate below to reflect a 6 camera rig.